Showing posts with label margins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label margins. Show all posts

Friday, August 28, 2015

How to Make a Stock Certificate (4 Steps)


Draft the wording for the front and back of the certificate. On the front side, include your company’s full legal name, the name of the person to whom you’re issuing the stock, the number of shares the certificate represents and the issue date; leave a space for the business owner or corporate officers to sign. On the back side, summarize 'fine print' legal rights and limitations. For example, explain that there is a waiting period between when an employee receives stock as part of a private company's stock option and can sell it.
Set the page orientation of an 8.5-inch by 11-inch sheet of 32-pound paper to landscape, as most stock certificates run horizontally across the page. Then set page margins as wide as possible, about 0.5 inches on all four sides. Choose the center alignment option so the certificate has an equal amount of white space on both sides. Turn on paragraph marks using the show-hide option if you need help with spacing or placement. Once you finish the first certificate, save it as a template.
Find a border using the Borders and Shading or the Clip Art feature in your word processing program, or visit websites such as PDClipart.org or FreePrintableBorders4U.com that offer free downloadable borders. Follow the Walt Disney Company’s lead and include a unique background that allows you to use a stock certificate as a branding tool. Although you most likely don’t have the option to include drawings of famous characters like the Walt Disney Company does, you can include your company logo, a picture of your facility or pictures of your products or services. Insert background images as watermarks to make sure the background doesn’t interfere with foreground text.
Select an appropriate font and font size. Stock certificates commonly use a cursive or script-style font such as Old English, Script or Calligraphy for the business name and title, and a standard font such as Times New Roman or Arial for the remaining information on the front and the back. Choose no more than one or two fonts to avoid a cluttered appearance. Set the font size to about 48 points for the title and 11 points to 14 points for the body to make sure all the information is clear and readable

Friday, August 21, 2015

How to Know If a Stock Is Oversold


First of all, there are two meanings for an oversold stock. One relates to a stock's price in relation to its uderlying fundamentals. The other relates to a stock's price and its chart (Technical analysis). In this article I will address both.
OVERSOLD STOCK BASED ON FUNDAMENTALSWhen a stock price drops enough that the stock is 'cheap' in relation to other alternatives or itself, then it could be a good investment opportunity. Fundamentals such as earnings, margins, assets and the company's balance sheet must be analyzed. This is the realm of 'value investing'. Normally an oversold stock has a low P/E or PEG ratio or a low price to tangible book value.
OVERSOLD STOCK BASED ON TECHNICALSTo know if a stock is oversold using technical analysis the common tool used is the 'stochastic oscillator'. This is basically a momentum indicator. It uses two lines, %K and %D to measure the price movements in a stock's (or other asset) price. The two lines are always fluctuating whitin a certain numeric range. The range is between 0 and 100 for both lines. If the reading is above 80 it indicates that the stock could be overbought. It the reading is below 20 it would indicate that the stock is oversold. These numbers are intended to mean that a tren is unsustainable. Keep in mind they could just mean that the prices will be flat for a couple of days before returning to the previous trend.
I hope this information was useful. For more investment related articles check the resourses section near the bottom of this page.